Lucy Letby hospital executive and safeguarding chief tells public inquiry she 'didn't get everything right'
by Paul Britton · Manchester Evening NewsA hospital executive has told the public inquiry into the crimes of serial killer nurse Lucy Letby that she 'didn’t get everything right', but had 'the best intentions'.
Alison Kelly was director of nursing at the Countess of Chester Hospital during the period when Letby attacked babies on the neonatal unit between June 2015 and June 2016. Letby was moved off the unit in July 2016 to an administrative role after consultant paediatricians told Ms Kelly and other senior managers at the end of June that they were concerned she may be deliberately harming infants.
But police were not called in to investigate until May 2017 after the hospital bosses opted to commission a series of reviews into the increased mortality on the unit.
At the start of her evidence on Monday at the Thirlwall Inquiry, Ms Kelly said: "I would like to express my condolences to all the families and I'm really sorry for all the distress that the families have experienced over the last few years, and are currently experiencing as we sit here today. I didn’t get everything right. However the decisions I made were with the best intentions."
Ms Kelly, who as part of her role was the executive lead for safeguarding children, told the hearing she never regarded the increase in deaths as a safeguarding matter. She agreed that one of the consultants, neonatal clinical lead Dr Stephen Brearey, told her in a meeting on May 11 2016 about his concerns over the rise in deaths but said he did not mention fears of deliberate harm.
Letby was discussed, she said, but she had 'assurances' from her nursing team there were no concerns about her as a nurse practitioner. Ms Kelly said: “There was nothing clearly articulated in that meeting. We all felt by the end of that meeting that we could review the situation in a number of weeks’ time."
(Image: Getty Images)
She said there continued to be “no articulation of actual issues” from the consultants following the deaths of two triplet boys, on successive days in June 2016.
Ms Kelly said: “There was never any clarity again. Nobody had seen her do anything. There were terms used like gut feeling… which did not pinpoint any particular issues with Letby.”
Consultants went on to tell Ms Kelly and senior managers that there had been a pattern of six out of nine deaths occurring at night and the pattern stopped when Letby was moved to days, and that some babies had not responded to resuscitation as expected. But Ms Kelly said management were “balancing that” with the “nursing views of her practice and how highly regarded she was thought of”.
She said: “We needed to get more facts, we needed to pull more things together to see what the fuller picture was at the time.
"We had no actual evidence as in nobody had seen her do anything. There was broadbrush statements, there was no evidence provided to us at that time. I think we needed to look at everything in the round in terms of clinical outcomes as well as looking at one individual.
Ms Kelly denied she had not taken the concerns “seriously enough”.
Explaining why police were not called in by the hospital to investigate in the summer of 2016, she said: “I think we had a general conversation about the fact that we all personally needed to know and understand what was actually going on in our organisation so that we could clearly articulate to the police what the problems were.
“At the time, we didn’t really have a sense of what was going on.”
Letby, 34, from Hereford, is serving 15 whole-life orders after she was convicted at Manchester Crown Court of murdering seven infants and attempting to murder seven others, with two attempts on one of her victims, between June 2015 and June 2016.
The inquiry, sitting at Liverpool Town Hall before Lady Justice Thirlwall, is expected to sit until early 2025, with findings published by late autumn of that year.